Good morning!!!!

   / Good morning!!!! #34,151  
Morning all. Been running around a lot looking for work. Is 49 out this AM, highs into the mid-70's. I'll be cutting grass today, it is waist high. Got lawnmower back. Put bushhog on Kubota, may try that first. I guess I need to suck it up and just not let the grass get that high. I do have two mowers but one is not really self-propelled.

Enjoy the weekend. Remember our Veterans! Give thanks accordingly.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #34,152  
43 this morning and headed to 77 today. Managed to get the first truss to my building laid out and ready to glue and nail together. Once it's together I'll be putting some blocks on the trailer so maybe I can make the others all the same. But first things first today. Have birds that need more space so its opening up and heating another chamber. Then mowing. That will take most of the day. I do need to go to town and get some Gorilla Glue to glue on the gussets with.

Drew. Your probably right about the tree roots. Does your area even have sink holes? I live less than an hour from the Corvette Museum. They have sinkhole ground we don't. I live in coal country and they live in cave country.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #34,153  
50F headed to mid-60's and cloudy.

Thanks for the well wishes for Mom. The surgery went well according to the Docs. Mom was recovering from the anesthetic the rest of the day, high as a kite and feeling no pain. Hope she lands softly this morning. :)

Good luck with all the various projects that going on.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #34,154  
Good Morning! 66˚ cloudy. I mowed the extended yard yesterday for the first time this year. It stayed in the 60's all day!!! I should have used the Brushog. The fibrous pasture grasses were up to the handle bars and took 4 passes with the Z. The Hustler FasTrak never bogged down. :thumbsup: Used 5 gallons of gas in 5 hours. I'll put that expense under entertainment.

Dave1949, Hope Mom has some good pain meds available when she lands.

Yesterday was "PAPER DAY!!" (always said with excitement). On Thursdays we get our local once a week newspaper in the mail. The Sherif's report always has something unusual. This week it was reported that a woman called 911 after she stopped to get a turtle out of the road. The road was State Hwy 21 - 4 lanes, no shoulders, speed limit 70 MPH (112.6 KPH for Eric). She stopped in the middle of the road to protect the turtle while she moved the turtle off the road :eek: but. . . . locked her keys in the car and needed assistance.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #34,155  
Good Morning. 0820, sunny, 67F with 73% humidity. Forecast high of 86F with 0% chance of rain today, with a low of 64F tonight. Nice and cool out this morning. A couple of hours ago when I went to turn on the soaker hoses it was 63F.

I'll be going in to work at my regular Friday time {1300}, so not much time to get involved in the garden. Do have to pick the cucumbers. I guess that will be an everyday thing until they play out.

Everyone have a good day,

Larro
 
   / Good morning!!!! #34,156  
Good Morning! 66˚ cloudy. I mowed the extended yard yesterday for the first time this year. It stayed in the 60's all day!!! I should have used the Brushog. The fibrous pasture grasses were up to the handle bars and took 4 passes with the Z. The Hustler FasTrak never bogged down. :thumbsup: Used 5 gallons of gas in 5 hours. I'll put that expense under entertainment.

Dave1949, Hope Mom has some good pain meds available when she lands.

Yesterday was "PAPER DAY!!" (always said with excitement). On Thursdays we get our local once a week newspaper in the mail. The Sherif's report always has something unusual. This week it was reported that a woman called 911 after she stopped to get a turtle out of the road. The road was State Hwy 21 - 4 lanes, no shoulders, speed limit 70 MPH (112.6 KPH for Eric). She stopped in the middle of the road to protect the turtle while she moved the turtle off the road :eek: but. . . . locked her keys in the car and needed assistance.



Too bad she didn't get the other 15-20 dead ones I saw on that highway. There is no room to pull over unless you pull into a rare driveway. I wish they would divide Hwy 21 (which has a great history) and add shoulders. 21 is supposedly one of the oldest trails in Texas and yet, it is still just 2 lanes in many areas. There are some old granite markers on the part of it I commute on.
Origins of the Camino Real in Texas | Texas Almanac

Don, hopefully you can now see where the death snake is laying. I'm guessing that was as big of a heart beating test as any you've had in the last years.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #34,157  
52 and sunny warming to 70 today.I will taking out old Flower Bed and remove border blocks.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #34,158  
54F headed for a high of 78F under partly cloudy skies with light wind. Temps will gradually increase into the 90s over the next week, so it looks like Memorial Day will officially open the summer season around here.

I go away for a couple of days, and my oh my, have you fellas been busy! Eric & Drew with their paving projects, MFW off and running with the loggers, TX Don rescuing waterlogged watermelon patches, a lot of you with drenching rains, but Ron's got dusty roads and dirty windows, Thomas is already stacking firewood (slow down, Thomas, yer makin' the rest of us look bad!), Farmer'09 is working on more space for his broods, Larro's garden is already makin' bounty, everybody's out mowing (I should be, too), and thank goodness Dave's mom is recovering from her operation.

My little trip went as expected, no surprises and plenty of lifting and hauling. The pallet racks came apart very easily, but oh those 3/4" x 4' x 8' sheets of particle board were HEAVY! It all fit nicely into the back of the SuperDuty, along with gallons of solvents, miles of compressed air lines, and a box of fire brick that couldn't have been left behind. Found a new pair of shoes at a new REI outdoors store in my old home town on the way to the current home, and enjoyed a burrito lunch at an old favorite hang out. Then it was back to the long drive, and with transits of two major metro areas, there were several demonstrations of demented driving by the natives. No actual metal-to-metal contact ensued, but it was close. No wonder insurance rates keep going up!

Yesterday, unloading the truck went much more easily, as I was able to back it up to the trailer that will be a temporary home for the racks and mostly just slide the pieces from one to the other. Then came a neighbor with his ancient DR brush trimmer, badly in need of a new deck to cover the whirling blade. He was accompanied by a friend, who with an almost identical SuperDuty to mine quickly became one of my new friends, and who contributed the steel for the project. He left us on our own, and with one cutting and the other welding we were done in a couple of hours. Didn't quite have enough material for the top of the deck, so I suspect he'll be back.

Right about then the PG&E man showed up to replace the "smart" meter, which was the excuse for the recent $140 power bill. It seems it wasn't reporting reliably, and the power company had been under estimating the usage for the last 6 months, so naturally they decided to catch up all at once in a month I expected hardly any use at all. Regardless, this meter has a much stronger radio in it, and I was shown other meters and relays on the meter man's PC that could be "seen" through the new meter's wireless network connection. I'd also asked about dimming lights when the well pump started, and his less than inspiring response was to shake the wires where they connected to the meter box and pronounce them sound. Sigh. I should have pulled the meter before his arrival and tightened all the connections myself while the power was interrupted. Now I'll have to work with the top half of the service panel hot, one handed with the other in my pocket for safety.

Today it's back to the tractor and the FEL project, and with a little luck it'll be done this afternoon. A nice Tri-Tip found its way into my grocery cart on the way home, so I'll start the smoker about noon to celebrate another TGIF at the start of a long, and hopefully quiet-at-home, Memorial Day weekend. While you're enjoying the time off, spare a few moments to appreciate the sacrifices of those that have gone before us, and that enable the life style that we take for granted today.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #34,159  
My little trip went as expected, no surprises and plenty of lifting and hauling. The pallet racks came apart very easily, but oh those 3/4" x 4' x 8' sheets of particle board were HEAVY! It all fit nicely into the back of the SuperDuty, along with gallons of solvents, miles of compressed air lines, and a box of fire brick that couldn't have been left behind. Found a new pair of shoes at a new REI outdoors store in my old home town on the way to the current home, and enjoyed a burrito lunch at an old favorite hang out. Then it was back to the long drive, and with transits of two major metro areas, there were several demonstrations of demented driving by the natives. No actual metal-to-metal contact ensued, but it was close. No wonder insurance rates keep going up!

Yesterday, unloading the truck went much more easily, as I was able to back it up to the trailer that will be a temporary home for the racks and mostly just slide the pieces from one to the other. Then came a neighbor with his ancient DR brush trimmer, badly in need of a new deck to cover the whirling blade. He was accompanied by a friend, who with an almost identical SuperDuty to mine quickly became one of my new friends, and who contributed the steel for the project. He left us on our own, and with one cutting and the other welding we were done in a couple of hours. Didn't quite have enough material for the top of the deck, so I suspect he'll be back.

Right about then the PG&E man showed up to replace the "smart" meter, which was the excuse for the recent $140 power bill. It seems it wasn't reporting reliably, and the power company had been under estimating the usage for the last 6 months, so naturally they decided to catch up all at once in a month I expected hardly any use at all. Regardless, this meter has a much stronger radio in it, and I was shown other meters and relays on the meter man's PC that could be "seen" through the new meter's wireless network connection. I'd also asked about dimming lights when the well pump started, and his less than inspiring response was to shake the wires where they connected to the meter box and pronounce them sound. Sigh. I should have pulled the meter before his arrival and tightened all the connections myself while the power was interrupted. Now I'll have to work with the top half of the service panel hot, one handed with the other in my pocket for safety.

Today it's back to the tractor and the FEL project, and with a little luck it'll be done this afternoon. A nice Tri-Tip found its way into my grocery cart on the way home, so I'll start the smoker about noon to celebrate another TGIF at the start of a long, and hopefully quiet-at-home, Memorial Day weekend. While you're enjoying the time off, spare a few moments to appreciate the sacrifices of those that have gone before us, and that enable the life style that we take for granted today.

Nice haul. :) Good to see you back on.

Dunno about those Smart Meters. I have two for my grid-tied system, in and out. The radio reading must have been flakey this winter because the reader truck resumed coming to read the meter manually, but i haven't seen them lately. It does not inspire confidence in their technical abilities with new technology. My solar installer told me they only really need one meter of the type I have but the power co. doesn't know how to program them for net use. :p
 
   / Good morning!!!! #34,160  
Good Morning. It's 54 F out. Headed to only 55F for today with rain.

We're near the end of May and the cool weather is trying to return. Was running the ac's not long ago and now this.

The weather is trying to tease us.

Come on warm weather get back here soon. lol
 

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